3 Pieces of Noise to Ignore With Bitcoin, Solana, and Ethereum


These days, it can seem like everyone has an opinion about major cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, (CRYPTO: BTC) Solana, (CRYPTO: SOL) and Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH). But, as with a lot of the commentary on markets and investments in general, there’s a lot of noise that’s worth ignoring, and precious few nuggets of actionable insight.

Especially if you’re not a direct participant in the cryptocurrency sector, it can be quite difficult to orient yourself correctly and keep your focus on the factors that actually matter. So let’s take a look at three types of chatter that are worth ignoring rather than engaging with as part of your investing process.

It’s reasonable for people to pay attention when a major global player, like a government, decides to exit its holdings of a cryptocurrency. Such players often command vast sums of assets, and it’s obvious that selling off those assets all at once will have a detrimental impact on the market value of the associated coins.

Take, for example, Germany’s decision to sell $3 billion worth of Bitcoin it came into possession of via asset seizures in June 2024. Aside from being the talk of the cryptocurrency town square for at least a few weeks, it also may have put a serious dent in the king cryptocurrency’s pricing, at least for a while. A prospective sale by the U.S. government of roughly $6.4 billion in Bitcoin that could occur this year could easily have a similar or even greater detrimental impact.

Sales by whales in other cryptocurrencies like Ethereum are rarely on the same scale as those by governments, but they still make headlines. Individual large holders selling a mere $33 million in mid-January of this year are gathering attention, even if the price impact isn’t as significant as with Bitcoin.

Still, these discussions are not worth following up on. In the long run it doesn’t really matter which players were selling or when. Thus, as an investor, keep your attention on the longer view rather than on what a few big investors are said to be doing.

The distributed nature of blockchain networks as they’re realized in Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana is that if the validators of the network disagree about some fundamental attributes of their protocols, they can fork the chain and start a new project.

Such forks have happened numerous times in the past to both Ethereum and Bitcoin. You may have heard of these forked versions at the time, and it’s possible that you even hold a few of the forked coins.


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